“If you have a conscience, you’re really condoning bad behavior by continuing to be there,” Baker said. “Many say it’s the dollars (raised at the events) that count. Yes. But the integrity of any or organization rests on their sound decisions and stewardship.”

She added: ”Personally, I do not feel that supporting him, directly or indirectly, speaks well of any organization.”

Baker’s comments are the strongest yet from Palm Beach County’s business community in the wake of Trump’s conflicting and, too many, polarizing statements made in the aftermath of the weekend violence.

On Friday night, neo-Nazis and white supremacists marched through the northwestern Virginia town that is home to Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello. On Saturday, a suspected white supremacist a rammed a car into a crowd of counter-protesters, killing one and injuring 19.

In response, Trump first blamed Saturday’s violence “on many sides,” but zeroed in specific criticism of the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazis two days later after a backlash to his initial statement.

However, Trump doubled down on his first set of comments during a volatile, off-the-cuff news conference Tuesday afternoon at Trump Tower — and then tweeted support for Confederate monuments on Thursday.

The president’s defiant statements, which have been applauded by former KKK leader David Duke and other white supremacists, have put national business leaders in a quandary. A series of defections from two White House business advisory councils led to dissolution of the groups on Wednesday.

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